AMD today announced immediate availability of the AMD FirePro W600 professional graphics card, the company’s first professional graphics card to leverage AMD’s Graphics Core Next architecture and 28nm production technology, for use in high-resolution, content-rich, multi-screen display wall environments. With this launch, AMD is addressing a growing need for large, dynamic screens that are easily updated with new content.

“Whether we are checking flight times at the airport or watching the latest ads on massive screens in city squares, digital signage has quickly become an important and ubiquitous part of our lives,” said Matt Skynner, corporate vice president and general manager of AMD Graphics. “To enable these displays, the digital signage industry demands technology that can be regularly refreshed with new, feature-rich content. With the launch of the AMD FirePro W600 professional graphics card, AMD is helping advance the digital display wall industry by providing suppliers and developers with impressive display density, performance and exceptional value.”

System integrators and display installation builders are rapidly replacing single, low-resolution displays with the latest in HD LED, LCD and plasma technologies that can reach audiences on massive, high-resolution screens grouped together to form a single image or divided into multiple streams of information. The thinner, lighter and increasingly cost-effective nature of these technologies makes multi-screen display walls attractive to a range of companies, including those in the advertising, entertainment, operations, security, training and video-conferencing markets. Not only is the AMD FirePro W600 professional graphics card designed to meet these needs, but also to empower the latest cutting-edge technology from AMD’s trusted display technology partners.

"The core philosophy of everything we do here at Mitsubsihi Electric is quality. But we realize that the quality of our display solutions means nothing if we can't deliver the content that users need,” said Peter van Dijk, business development manager, Mitsubishi Electric Europe. “That's why the AMD FirePro™ W600 graphics card in combination with the Composer/Play-Out system is such an important part of our offering. With its ability to drive multiple displays, deliver breathtaking 3D, video and interactive content, the W600 delivers the ultimate in performance and the ultimate in quality - no matter what the application."

The AMD FirePro W600 Professional Graphics card includes:

Support for up to six high-resolution displays or projectors from a single-slot card and six mini DisplayPort connectors;

2 GB of GDDR5 graphics memory for superior multimedia performance;

Support for two HD video streams via AMD’s Unified Video Decoder;

Projection overlap capability to create one seamless image, with planned support for projection edge blending and image warping in Q4 of 2012;

AMD PowerTune technology that dynamically optimizes power consumption during operation and AMD ZeroCore Power technology that provides reduced power consumption at idle

All AMD FirePro professional graphics solutions for display walls are designed for multi-screen configurations that require the highest visual quality, reliability and multimedia application performance. The AMD FirePro W600 professional graphics card joins a range of products for configuring displays with two to six screens, including the ATI FirePro 2460, AMD FirePro 2270, AMD FirePro V7900 and ATI FirePro V9800.

Sasqui said:I'd like to see what chip is under that hood. The meat of these cards (and high price) is in the drivers.

Mostly drivers yes. The chip is probably the same as the gaming counterpart (maybe cherry picked for lower power consumption), but I don't know if even a softmod of a Radeon card would be possible.
And it's not always the case that two cards are exactly the same but just labeled differently, usually stuff like ECC VRAM etc.
I have a softmoded Radeon card, but it's just not the same thing as the real deal no matter what people say. You usually end up having sever driver issues or lack of driver updates because you rely on patchscripts.http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/firepro-v3900-review-benchmark,3153-2.html